<http://www.balkanalysis.com/2008/10/23/lost-in-conversion/>Lost 
in Conversion?

10/23/2008 (Balkanalysis.com)

By Christopher Deliso

When Kosovo’s Albanians celebrated the major 
Muslim holiday of Bajram, at the end of 
September, more than a few worshippers were conspicuous for their absence.

A trickle of media articles over the past few 
months have dealt with the issue of religion in 
Kosovo from a relatively unreported angle: the 
curious phenomenon of conversion. Apparently, 
Albanians in this Muslim-majority statelet have 
been increasingly ‘returning’ to the Catholic 
religion, which their ancestors had forsaken centuries ago.

This story is interesting and relevant in its own 
right, but has become particularly revealing in 
light of the way it has been developed in the 
media, something that raises another set of 
issues. Whereas early reports of a new trend 
towards conversion mentioned the fact that 
Albanians had been Christians before the Ottomans 
arrived in the 14th century, and converted 
thereafter, only recently have reports begun 
adding an element of victimology to the narrative.

For example, 
<http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080929/wl_nm/us_kosovo_catholics>a 
Sept. 28 Reuters report that took the pulse of 
recently reborn Catholics in Kosovo claimed that 
‘…the majority of ethnic Albanians were forcibly 
converted to Islam, mostly through the imposition 
of high taxes on Catholics, when the Ottoman 
Empire ruled the Balkans.’ This almost seems to 
imply that other Christians were threatened with 
taxation by the Turks, but did not convert. It 
also ignores that in several places at different 
times, Christians seeking to convert were 
actually prevented from doing so because the 
Ottomans prudently sought they would lose a local 
tax base for relatively little in return.

Reuters’ description of ‘forcible conversion’ as 
something to be equated with desire for social 
advancement is a strange one. The real things 
that were forcible for the Ottomans were the 
forced kidnappings of young Christian men and 
women for the janissary corps and harems of 
Constantinople. Although there were far worse 
things to be suffered than paying high taxes by 
remaining Christian under the Turks, these were 
left out. In backwards hinterlands of the empire, 
as in Kosovo and Bosnia, the local Muslim lords 
were known for being especially pernicious 
towards those who did not desert their religion.

Although this disparity led to simmering 
resentments which had long-term influence, as 
pointed out by former NSA officer <..htm>John 
Schindler in the Bosnian context, the article 
does not consider how inter-ethnic problems in 
Kosovo today might perhaps have roots in this 
phenomenon. Schindler notes that it was 
particularly in border hinterlands of the empire 
such as Bosnia and Kosovo that the rule of the 
Turks and converted local lords allegiant to them 
was especially vicious. The Orthodox Christian 
Serbs clung to their religion- and suffered under 
the rule of those who found it expedient to 
change their own. Understanding the context of 
local opinions today requires an appreciation of this former relationship.

Within the Albanian community itself, how is the 
conversion issue playing out? The Kosovars 
interviewed by Reuters tended to take the 
‘crypto-Christian’ route, by which they claimed 
that their forefathers only pretended to be 
Muslims: “…for centuries, many remembered their 
Christian roots and lived as what they call 
‘Catholics in hiding.’ Some, nearly a century 
after the Ottomans left the Balkans, now see the 
chance to reveal their true beliefs.”

The timing is indeed quite impeccable. Yet the 
experiences of this reporter indicate perhaps 
another motivation at work. In April, our team 
visited precisely the same church in Klina where 
the Reuters piece starts off at with the Sopi 
family (perhaps related to the famous, deceased 
Albanian bishop of that name?) However, speaking 
informally with young Albanians outside the 
church, a very different concept emerged. As one 
20-year-old student put it: “we know that the 
West does not like Muslims and is against Islam. 
It is better for us to be Christians again.”

In Pristina, inside a small Catholic church, the 
caretaker informed us that some 21 people had 
come in the previous three months to re-embrace 
the faith; more were expected to emerge. As the 
Reuters article points out, a large Catholic 
cathedral is being built here, much to the 
displeasure of Muslim leaders. The article quotes 
the head of the Kosovo Islamic community, Mufti 
Naim Ternava, who is opposed to the building of 
the new cathedral at the heart of Pristina, as 
criticizing rural church-building as well: “…no 
human brain can understand how a church should be 
build in the middle of 13 Muslim villages,” he said.
[]

Supporters of Kosovar Catholicism inevitably 
point to Mother Teresa, born in nearby Skopje, 
who has became the symbol of Albanian 
Christianity far and wide, a cultural process 
that has brought criticism from Muslim groups in 
Albania itself. Recent examples of some of these 
animosities are discussed in my book 
<http://www.amazon.com/Coming-Balkan-Caliphate-Threat-Radical/dp/0275995259>The 
Coming Balkan Caliphate: The Threat of Radical 
Islam to Europe and the West (Praeger Security 
International, 2007), in which I maintain that, 
in Kosovo the end of the nationalist question 
(i.e., with the achievement of statehood) is the 
beginning of the religious one.

After Kosovo’s Albanian leaders declared 
independence on February 17, some explained the 
Arab world’s failure to recognize this decree as 
a sort of revenge. Kosovo had taken so much money 
and aid from them, but in the end had turned its 
back on Islam. And, when overt conversion to 
Catholicism came after simply irreligious 
Westernization, it was like adding insult to 
injury. This hypothesis has not been proven, but 
remains an interesting one. And months later, the 
Arab world has done little to champion the Kosovar cause.

In a surreal twist, Iran’s relations with Serbia 
have actually been bolstered more since then than 
they have with Kosovo. Belgrade’s recent victory 
at the United Nations, in getting the right to 
make a case over the legality of Kosovo’s 
secession, would have been much more difficult 
had the Arab countries banded together to defend 
it. Perhaps they are holding out for future concessions?

Nevertheless, some in the Islamist internationale 
see a definite opportunity in the new Kosovo. The 
day after Kosovo declared independence on 
February 17, the Secretary General of the 
Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC), 
Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu, stated that “there is no 
doubt that the independence of Kosovo will be an 
asset to the Muslim world and further enhance the 
joint Islamic action.” The nature of this 
‘action’ was left unclear. But from what we have 
seen over the past decade in Kosovo, it is unlikely to be without dangers.

Although some say it has been definitely 
defeated, fundamentalist Islam in Kosovo has had 
a long history and incubation period. Certain 
Western intelligence agencies believe it still 
poses a potential long-term problem, if 
politicians are unable to increase the standard 
of living and assure real independence.

The arrival of fundamentalist Islam was the 
result of strong cross-border logistical 
networks, ‘safe houses’ and propaganda channels 
blossomed after August 1999, when the United 
Nations began administering Kosovo following 
NATO’s bombing campaign. At that point, Wahhabi 
proselytizers from the Arab world descended on 
Kosovo in force. They arrived chiefly through 
humanitarian and cultural organizations, many 
under the umbrella of the Saudi Joint Committee 
for the Relief of Kosovo and Chechnya and the 
Saudi Red Crescent Society. According to numerous 
former UN officials in Kosovo, however, these 
ostensibly humanitarian groups spent most of 
their time building mosques, proselytizing, and 
paying Albanians monthly stipends to dress and 
act according to conservative Wahhabi mores.

Although American pressure led to some charities 
being uprooted following 9/11, many remained 
durable. A prime example is the RIHS. In 2003, 
leaked UN police reports and photos indicated the 
ongoing activities in Kosovo of a Kuwaiti 
worldwide charity, the Revival of Islamic 
Heritage Society (RIHS), which had been 
blacklisted by the Bush administration in 
Pakistan and Afghanistan for having ties to al 
Qaeda early the year before, and which had, in 
Albania during the early 1990s, been used to 
shield terrorists belonging to Egyptian Islamic Jihad.

At the same time in war-torn Bosnia, the RIHS was 
creating radical youth groups to disseminate 
jihad propaganda, catering to war orphans and 
other impressionable young people. The fact that 
the RIHS had, despite also being implicated in 
500 simultaneous bombings in Bangladesh in August 
2005, been allowed to continue its activities in 
Albania, Kosovo and Bosnia came to light in June 
2006, with a Bosnian prosecutor’s investigation 
into some 14 million euros in RIHS funds that 
mysteriously could not be accounted for. Yet 
despite reportedly changing its addresses and 
information frequently in Bosnia, the 
organization still apparently works freely in the 
world’s newest independent state, Kosovo.

Along with building hundreds of new mosques, 
disseminating Islamist propaganda and inculcating 
it into the young, the proponents of Wahhabism 
sought to spread their tentacles by establishing 
an Islamic banking system in rural areas 
historically prone to isolationism and 
radicalism. One such charity, Islamic Relief, had 
already by September 2004 provided 500 loans to 
impoverished Kosovar farmers and small 
businessmen, according to “Islamic principles.” 
In poor areas where the West has shown little 
interest in supplying aid, the foreign Islamists have been happy to do so.

A further concern here is the convergence of 
terrorism with organized crime in Kosovo, 
particularly the global trafficking in human 
beings, narcotics and weapons. Kosovo has served 
as a terrorist transfer zone, in which 
Wahhabi-run villages and mosques became safe 
harbor for foreigners wanted in Western Europe or 
in their own countries for terrorism links.

The direct connection between terrorism and 
narcotics trafficking has been revealed on 
numerous occasions, as with Norway’s September 
2006 arrest of al Qaeda operative Arfan Qadeer 
Bhatti. He and his accomplices were planning 
attacks on the US and Israeli embassies in Oslo; 
according to Norwegian news reports, they even 
planned to behead the Israeli ambassador. This 
Pakistani terrorist had connections with a Kosovo 
Albanian drug lord and even visited Pristina and 
Pec, a small town in western Kosovo, where he 
could administer to one of Kosovo’s largest Wahhabi flocks.

Nevertheless, radical Islam has failed to catch 
on with the masses, and the Vatican – led by a 
Europe-focused German Pope – is eager to build on 
its success in spreading Catholicism more widely.

An Italian journalist specializing in security 
issues who has conducted investigations in 
Kosovo, Paola Casoli, stated for Balkanalysis.com 
that the Catholic church’s “[ecumenical] concept 
and the huge network of relations due to the 
Vatican’s foreign politics [means] the presence 
of the Vatican through its representatives on the ground is obvious enough.”

According to Casoli, the church’s different 
approach to dealing with local Albanians also 
accounts for its success. “Add also the presence 
of ecclesiastic or ecclesiatic-related 
organizations, such as Caritas,” she says, citing 
a young Catholic Albanian, who maintained that 
the church “remained close to people’s needs, 
instead of [the Muslim groups that were] building mosques in every village.”

Casoli also sees the success of Catholicism in 
Kosovo these days as partially linguistic in 
nature. “Islamism imposes Arabic when addressing 
God and praying to Him,” she says, “whereas 
Albanians speak Albanian and not Arabic as their 
mother tongue,” and thus prefer this form of worship.

The reaction of Kosovo’s Muslim leaders has been 
fairly muffled, in part, Casoli maintains, 
because of a desire not to attract attention to their own movement.

At present, Balkanalysis.com believes, any danger 
of disputes or clashes between Catholic and 
Muslim Albanians is much more likely in Albania 
itself, where Islamic groups are more vocal.

The most active is the multilingual (Albanian, 
English and Turkish) non-governmental 
organization, the Muslim Forum of Albania, which 
has consistently 
<http://www.forumimusliman.org/english/tereza2.html>spoken 
out against ‘Christianizing’ efforts, the 
veneration of Mother Teresa, and against 
criticism of Islam in general. The organization 
employs the modern guise of Islamic activism – 
that is, aiming its directives to the 
‘international community’ and speaking the 
language of political correctness – in achieving its goals.

The most recent example, 
<http://www.forumimusliman.org/english/osce.html>a 
press release from June directed to the OSCE, 
exemplifies this tactic. It is also ironic in 
light of the media’s recent focus on forced 
conversion to Islam in Ottoman days. Au 
contraire, opines the MFA: “…what concerns our 
Forum the most are the many comments that have 
been made in Albania during these recent years 
where Islam has been depicted as a religion that 
goes contrary to Europe and the myth which claims 
that it was imposed upon the Albanians by Turkey. 
Comments that belittle the Muslims, Turkey and 
depict the Albanians as Christians converted by 
force in Islam have unfortunately found their way 
even [into] the Albanian school textbooks [in] recent years.”

Clearly, matters of religious belief are still 
being shaped by divergent historical 
interpretation in the Balkans today. If it were 
only a question of spirited debate, however, 
things would be relatively tame. However, a 
series of low-profile incidents, most unreported, 
continue. They include defacement of monuments in 
the north and churches in the Greek-minority 
south. One of the most interesting questions for 
the future is the extent to which a 
Catholic-Muslim divide in Kosovo will be felt in 
neighboring Albania, a country with strong social and historical connections.

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Lord, may everything we do begin with Your 
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We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Amen.



<*}}}>< 
<http://www.halfthekingdom.org/please%20donate.html>Donations 
are needed and very much appreciated <*}}}><
<*}}}>< <http://www.holypostage.com/>Holy Postage <*}}}><
<*}}}><<http://www.halfthekingdom.org/>Half the 
<http://www.halfthekingdom.org/>Kingdom!<*}}}><

Lord, may everything we do begin with Your 
inspiration and continue with Your help,
so that all our prayers and works may begin in You and by You be happily ended.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Amen.


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